Oprah Winfrey’s new network has announced the 10 contestants competing on “Your OWN Show: Oprah’s Search for the Next TV Star.”

The would-be hosts include a travel guide who’s in a wheelchair, a comedian who thinks the U.S. needs a gay best friend, and a businesswoman aiming to make a show about money both informative and fun.

The finalists were chosen from more than 9,500 online audition videos and thousands more hopefuls at open casting calls, the Oprah Winfrey Network announced Thursday. More than 143 million votes were submitted online, OWN said.

The winner will be selected on the show by judges including Dr. Phil McGraw and Gayle King, who will subject them to a range of TV-host-related challenges.

The winner gets a show airing on Winfrey’s cable channel.

With Nancy O’Dell and Carson Kressley hosting, “Your OWN Show” premieres Jan. 7. The Oprah Winfrey Network launches Saturday.

The contestants include:

- Zach Anner, of Austin, Texas, a globe-trotter in a wheelchair who wants to host a show for people who never thought they were physically capable of traveling.

- Elizabeth Espinosa, a TV news reporter from Los Angeles who wants to share what she’s learned helping raise a younger brother who is learning disabled.

- Aunt Flora, of Cincinnati, who specializes in Southern cuisine.

- Leigh Koechner, a Valley Village, Calif., mother of four and the wife of actor David Koechner who wants to host a talk show.

- Kristina Kuzmic-Crocco, of Alhambra, Calif., who wants to demonstrate on her food show that “cooking doesn’t have to be perfect as long as it’s fun, easy and delicious.”

- Ryan O’Connor, of West Hollywood, Calif., who says he wants to be the country’s gay best friend. “If a variety show and a traditional talk show had a baby, that’d be my show,” he said.

- Tony Roach, an Abilene, Texas, minister who dropped out of high school to live on the streets before getting his doctoral degree in divinity.

- Terey Summers, a comedic motivational speaker for youth from Phoenix.

- Alicia Taylor, of Las Vegas, who started a mortgage company and says, “People need a practical and fun show about all things financial.”

- Eric Warren, an expert in the kitchen from Lawndale, Calif., who has dropped 62 pounds and wants to host a cooking show that has America losing weight along with him.

Visit The Official Site:

http://www.oprah.com/own

 

PARADE’s Dec. 26 cover story with Oprah Winfrey, where the queen of talk discusses everything from her new network to supporting Obama and, maybe, becoming an ambassador! Ever wonder what she cooks Stedman for dinner? PARADE has ‘a day in her life’ and so much more…

Here are some highlights:

Retire or launch OWN?
“I was questioning, Why don’t I build a boat and sail around the world? Why don’t I learn French and find a nice little house in Provence? I could see myself bicycling with my baguettes and the whole thing. But I talked it over with my friends, and they all said, ‘You’re not going to be happy doing nothing.’ ”

What Oprah would perceive as a failure.
“What will be a failure is if nobody comes and watches this network. What others will perceive as failure is if some shows don’t succeed. I’m concerned about the bigger overall picture: my belief that people are basically good and want to see the good in them reflected through their experiences and the shows that they watch. This is a gamble I’m taking. I believe that the banal state of television, the kind of insipid space that we’re in–that you can have as many channels as we have and not find anything that really interests you–means that to a great extent we’ve lost our way.”

On President Obama.
“I think that no one understands until you’ve been in that seat the enormous pressure to please and satisfy everybody. And I think instead of being grateful for where we are and what he has done, we’ve forgotten that we were on the brink of a depression when he took over this office. And as everybody celebrates the holiday season and sits around with their families, regardless of your circumstance, we could’ve had breadlines. How soon we forget that.”

Oprah the ambassador?
“Nobody’s offered [that] to me in this administration. But I will tell you a funny story. When I was at the Kennedy Center Honors for Tina Turner [in 2005], I was sitting at Colin Powell’s table, and he said that we were in the ambassadors room [a room at the State Department with portraits of ambassadors and secretaries of state]. And I said, ‘Gee, this is really–this is lovely. An ambassador, I think that would be really great.’ He goes, ‘Name your country, baby, name your country.’ ”

Plus, in these exclusive extras from the story (that appear online only) Oprah reveals her thoughts on Sarah Palin and starring in her own reality show. She also talks about how thinking about Michael Jackson made her relax about taking a risk with OWN. Read on:
http://www.parade.com/celebrity/celebrity-parade/2010/1222-oprah-winfrey-extras.html

 

Fresh off an Australian tour with her frenzied talk-show fans, Oprah Winfrey is taking a respite in the South Pacific island nation of Fiji, where the military regime wished her “a great time.”

Fiji’s tourism minister said Winfrey was spending the Christmas holiday there and that officials wanted to respect her privacy. Local media reported she arrived Thursday and that she and longtime beau Stedman Graham were to stay until Dec. 26.

“We know she is here for a holiday and respect that, and the government obviously wants Winfrey to have a great time,” Aiyaz Sayed-Khaiyum, the tourism minister, said Saturday.

Tourism on Fiji is active, though relations with other countries have been strained by the lack of democracy since a December 2006 military coup. Australia and New Zealand imposed travel bans on Fiji leaders, and international trade sanctions have been imposed, but elections have only been pushed back.

The U.S. State Department has warned Americans to carefully consider the risks of travel to Fiji and to be vigilant while there. During a visit to Australia last month, Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton called for democracy to be restored in Fiji and for political freedoms to advance.

The islands have been a frequent celebrity destination in the past. Rolling Stone Keith Richards famously fell from a tree at the exclusive Wakaya Club in 2006 and was rushed to New Zealand for brain surgery.

The country is serious about maintaining its image as a destination for stars who want to get away from it all in a hidden paradise, said Sayed-Khaiyum, Fiji’s top tourism official and its attorney general.

“Fiji is one of those destinations where we like people to come and have their own private time, and we’re here to ensure that happens,” he said. “We don’t want Fiji to become a playground for the paparazzi.”

Winfrey launched the 25th and final season of “The Oprah Winfrey Show” by surprising her audience with an eight-day trip to Australia. The lucky chosen fans snorkeled the Great Barrier Reef, surfed at Bondi Beach and explored the rugged Outback before Tuesday’s grand send-off: two star-studded shows taped on the steps of the Sydney Opera House.

Winfrey lavished praise on her Australian hosts, the scenery and the citizens, and countered criticism about the government footing the $5 million bill by saying the publicity will reap millions more.

“It is immeasurable what four hours of a love festival about your country broadcast in 145 countries around the world can do,” Winfrey told reporters.

Her representatives in Chicago did not return calls for comment this weekend.

 

Russell Crowe almost missed his appearance on Oprah Winfrey’s huge show at the Sydney Opera House on Monday, after security guards failed to recognize him.

The Gladiator actor was one of the superstars who helped Winfrey celebrate her mammoth TV talk show at the famed venue after she took filming Down Under earlier this month.

But he could have been left watching at home after bouncers wouldn’t let him through the gates – because they didn’t have him on their guest list.

During filming, he told Winfrey, “I walked here and just went up to the gate, but the security guy wasn’t sure what to do. It wasn’t on his running sheet.”

The TV titan replied in an Aussie accent, joking, “There’s a guy out here who says he’s Russell Crowe.”

Crowe went on to sing a rousing performance of Peter Allen’s I Still Call Australia Home alongside Hugh Jackman, Olivia Newton-John, Nicole Kidman and her husband Keith Urban.

 

Australian movie star Hugh Jackman was slightly injured on Tuesday while performing a stunt during the taping of an Oprah Winfrey show at the Sydney Opera House.

Live television showed Jackman sliding down a cable from the top of the Sydney Opera House toward a giant outdoor stage, but he failed to stop, crashing into the stage’s light rigging and hurting his face.

“That was so much fun, until the end,” joked Jackman, famed for his tough Wolverine role.

Jackman, later sporting a small bandage under his eye, told Winfrey that the excitement of sliding down the cable caused him to brake too late.

“I came down waving to everyone, looking over Sydney Harbour, saw my dad, the kids and you (Winfrey), went to pull the brake and then boing,” he said.

Entertainment reporters at the scene said Jackman was hit in the eye. Television showed Jackman holding some ice on his face and taking a swig of red wine. It was reported that Jackman suffered a black eye.

But Jackman was well enough to give Winfrey a lesson on eating Vegemite, a black yeast breakfast spread many Australians love. He spread some onto a biscuit and offered it to the TV chat show queen.

“I like it,” declared Winfrey, before eating some more and washing it down with a glass of one of Australia’s best and most expensive wines, the Penfold’s Grange.

Winfrey, with 302 specially flown American guests in tow, is in Australia producing two TV chat shows, with Australian guests such as Jackman, Russell Crowe, Nicole Kidman, Keith Urban and Olivia Newton John.

Winfrey’s American guests have also filmed their travels around Australia to the Outback and the Great Barrier Reef. Their video journals will be part of the shows that will air later in the United States.

Australia has spent more than A$3 million ($3 million) bringing “The Oprah Winfrey Show” to Australia as a way to boost tourism. The TV show is watched by 40 million Americans and screened in 145 countries.

 

Thousands of shrieking, jubilant fans flocked to the Sydney Opera House on Tuesday to watch TV talk show queen Oprah Winfrey tape two star-studded shows for her final series.

There were celebrities, giveaways and screams-a-plenty as 6,000 Oprah devotees jammed the steps of the landmark arts center in Australia’s biggest city for the filming. The production marked the finale of her weeklong trip, accompanied by 302 U.S. audience members who took part in “Oprah’s Ultimate Australian Adventure.”

Winfrey’s staffers whipped the already frenzied crowd into a tear-drenched state of hysteria before the host ascended the stage to the sounds of Men At Work’s “Down Under,” Australia’s unofficial anthem.

“HELLOOOO AUSTRALIAAAAA!” she bellowed as the audience’s roar reached a deafening pitch. “Now I understand why you call Australia ‘Oz,’ ’cause we truly are at the end of the yellow brick road!”

Winfrey launched her 25th and final season of “The Oprah Winfrey Show” in September by surprising her audience with her ultimate giveaway: an eight-day trip to Australia. For the past week, the lucky chosen have been traveling the continent – snorkeling the Great Barrier Reef, surfing at Sydney’s famous Bondi Beach and exploring the rugged Outback.

Winfrey said she had long hoped to travel to Australia, and taking the audience with her made the experience even richer.

“Life is always better when you can share it,” she said before the taping.

Four shows from Winfrey’s Aussie adventure will screen in January and are expected to be watched by millions of people in 145 countries.

The state and federal governments have spent around $5 million on the trip, a price that has drawn criticism from some Australians. But officials and Winfrey herself insist the shows will bring many millions more in tourism publicity.

“It is immeasurable what four hours of a love festival about your country broadcast in 145 countries around the world can do,” Winfrey told reporters.

And a love festival it was, with Winfrey lavishing praise on her Australian hosts, the scenery and the citizens.

“You’re so darn friendly, you must go to friendly class!” she told the crowd, who were randomly selected from a pool of 350,000 hopefuls.

Her first guest was Australian actor Russell Crowe, who gave a nod to the surrounding sun-dappled harbor and said, “When you live in a city like this, it’s not that hard to be friendly.”

The nearby Harbour Bridge had been decorated with a giant “O” made of red lights – first illuminated during a fireworks display thrown in Winfrey’s honor earlier in her trip.

“When we (saw) the fireworks and that ‘O’ came over the bridge, I went into the ‘ugly cry,’” she told reporters. “That was a really amazing moment. I had an ‘O’ on the BRIDGE – on the Sydney Harbour Bridge!”

The show didn’t go off entirely without a hitch; during the taping of the second episode, actor Hugh Jackman hurt his eye while rappelling from the top of the Opera House onto the stage. The Australian hit the brakes too late, and smacked his face on a lighting rig. Taping was briefly suspended while he was examined by paramedics and given a glass of red wine to sip, before getting the all-clear.

“That was so much fun until the end,” he joked.

The family of the late “Crocodile Hunter” Steve Irwin also made an emotional appearance on the program. Daughter Bindi walked on stage with a python named “Olivia” draped around her shoulders, assuring Winfrey “She’s really sweet!” as the host tentatively stroked the reptile.

Seven-year-old Robert Irwin told Winfrey he watches videos of his father – who was killed by a stingray barb in 2006 – every day.

“It’s so good because it’s like he’s actually there,” he said, reducing mother Terri Irwin and many in the crowd to tears.

“Living with Steve was like standing in a cyclone,” Terri said, eyes watering. “Then we lost him. It was like the wind stopped.”

Winfrey, famed for her giveaways, had plenty up her sleeve, including a $250,000 check for a cancer-stricken Australian man and his family, who have been struggling to pay their bills.

Hip hop artist Jay-Z, who also appeared on the show, stopped by a local boys’ school after one of their teachers wrote to Winfrey and told her how much the students loved the rapper. The students, most of whom are from low-income families, were invited to watch the show’s taping from inside the Opera House, and a live feed shown on the stage caught their reaction as Winfrey told them they would all be receiving free laptops.

“Now, no excuses not to do your homework!” Winfrey shouted as the students began leaping up and down, fists pumped in the air.

She didn’t stop there. After the crowd had danced itself to exhaustion during Bon Jovi’s performance of “Livin’ On a Prayer,” all 6,000 were informed they would be receiving a commemorative necklace made of native Australian pearls. (Cue the screaming.)

Winfrey said she plans to return to Australia, calling it a “magical, wondrous, wondrous place.”

“It has been an experience unparalleled,” she told reporters. “I will be back. And when I come back, you won’t know it. I’m going to sneak in next time.”

 

A tearful Oprah Winfrey has denied she is a lesbian, saying that constant rumors about her close relationship with a female friend were irritating “because it means that somebody must think I am lying.”

The influential TV talk show host addressed her 20-year relationship with Gayle King, and her ongoing partnership with lover Stedman Graham, in an emotional interview with journalist Barbara Walters to be shown on ABC television on Thursday.

“She is the mother I never had. She is the sister everybody would want. She is the friend that everybody deserves. I don’t know a better person,” Winfrey said of King, fighting back tears.

“It’s making me cry because I’m thinking about how much I probably have never told her that. Tissue please,” she added.

King and Winfrey, 56, met while working at a local Baltimore TV station in the 1980s and have been inseparable professionally and personally, sparking much media speculation that they are gay.

“I’m not a lesbian. I’m not even kind of a lesbian,” Winfrey told Walters, in an excerpt of the interview released on Wednesday. “And the reason why it irritates me is because it means that somebody must think I’m lying. That’s number one. Number two…why would you want to hide it? That is not the way I run my life.”

Winfrey, whose daily TV chat show is watched by millions in the United States and 145 other countries, said that businessman Stedman Graham was still her lover and mate after more than 20 years together, despite the fact they are now rarely seen in public together.

“I made a conscious effort around 2003, 2004 to pull back on my public appearances with Stedman,” she said.

But denying speculation that the pair had split up, she told Walters he was “the love, the lover, the man, the partner, the mate” of her life.

Winfrey is launching a new cable TV network, OWN, in January in a joint venture with Discovery Communications. She will end her ABC TV talk show in May 2011 after 25 years.

 

As a chat show host, Oprah Winfrey knows how to get people talking.

And the 56-year-old certainly succeeded tonight as she attended a reception for the 33rd Kennedy Centre Honors at in Washington DC.

The curvaceous TV star, who was among five people to receive the honor, wore a very low-cut white shirt to the White House event which she teamed with a black belt and long chocolate brown skirt.

Thankfully the rainbow medal she was awarded earlier provided just a few extra inches of coverage on what was an otherwise very revealing neckline.

Oprah was accompanied by her long-term partner, Stedman Graham.

But while her fashion choice might have been questionable, there was no doubt she was indeed a worthy recipient.

She was joined by Beatle Paul McCartney, dancer-choreographer Bill T. Jones, country singer Merle Haggard and Broadway composer Jerry Herman.

President Barack Obama says the five men and women who were chosen to receive this year’s honors have ‘given the nation the extraordinary gift of the arts.’

 

Former President George W. Bush and Michael Jackson’s parents are among the big names “The Oprah Winfrey Show” has booked for the November ratings sweeps.

Harpo Productions released a schedule Friday, including a show featuring Bush discussing his memoir, “Decision Points,” on Nov. 9 – the day of its release.

No date was given for the Jacksons’ interview. The production company says Katherine Jackson will talk about her son’s life from childhood stardom to his death. She’ll be joined by her husband, Joe Jackson.

Singer and actress Barbra Streisand will appear for an interview and a rare performance Nov. 16.

On Nov. 2, Ricky Martin will talk about raising twin boys and his decision to come out as gay.

This is the 25th and final season of Winfrey’s talk show.



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